Eggs are becoming plentiful and cheaper. Act now, preserve them in SHARLAND’S EGG PRESERVATIVE, and have cheap fresh eggs all the year round. Clean, economical. Buy a tin to-day at-vour store.—Advt. A statement made in Auckland that the use of Japanese oak had been severely restricted by import difficulties and much higher landing costs was questioned by Mr E. W. Archbold, one of the heads of a furniture ■ manufacturing firm in Christchurch. Mr Archbold said that no difficulty had been found in securing supplies, and that a shipment was now on the way The statement that the price of Japanese oak had doubled since the war was not correct, he said; the price had risen only slightly. He did not agree that rimu had largely taken the place of oak. i
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 24420, 4 October 1940, Page 5
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131Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 Otago Daily Times, Issue 24420, 4 October 1940, Page 5
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